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・ Tenth Street/Promenade (Metromover station)
・ Tenth Texas Legislature
・ Tenth United States Army
・ Tenth Van Cliburn International Piano Competition
・ Tenth Ward
・ Tenth Ward Square
・ Tentacles of Doom
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・ Tentacolino
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Tentam
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・ Tentamun (20th dynasty)
・ Tentamun (21st dynasty)
・ Tentaoculus
・ Tentaoculus balantiophaga
・ Tentaoculus eritmetus
・ Tentaoculus georgianus
・ Tentaoculus granulatus
・ Tentaoculus haptricola
・ Tentaoculus lithodicola
・ Tentaoculus neolithodicola
・ Tentaoculus perlucidus


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Tentam : ウィキペディア英語版
Tentam

Tentam (1969–1981) was an American Thoroughbred racehorse. Owned by Charles W. Engelhard, Jr., who raced him under his Cragwood Stables banner, Tentam won Grade 1 races and on August 11, 1973 set a world record for one and one eight miles on turf in winning the Bernard Baruch Handicap at Saratoga Race Course. () He was then sold for $2 million in September to E. P. Taylor whose Windfields Farm owned the supersire Northern Dancer. E. P. Taylor purchased Tentam, a descendant of Man o' War, for breeding purposes but raced him for the remainder of 1973 before syndicating him and sending him to stand at his stud farm.
Tentham met with reasonable success as a sire. Some of the best known among his progeny were Ten Gold Pots, the 1985
Sovereign Award for Canadian Champion Older Horse, and the filly, La Voyageuse, winner of three Canadian Sovereign Awards.
==References==

* (Tentam's pedigree and partial racing stats )
* (September 21, 1973 ''New York Times'' article on the sale of Tentam to E. P. Taylor )



抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Tentam」の詳細全文を読む



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